News

Raul Rojas dies at 70; L.A. gang member turned boxing champion

Raul Rojas was a gang member in Los Angeles before turning to boxing and becoming a world featherweight champion.

By Lance Pugmire, Los Angeles Times

Raul Rojas, a tough former gang member who turned to boxing and became a world featherweight champion, died Sunday of natural causes at a Los Angeles convalescent home, said his daughter Rebecca. He was 70.

Raul Rojas, shown in 1964, told The Times: “If it were not for boxing, I’d probably either be in San Quentin or would already have made the trip to the gas chamber.” (Paul M. Orduna / May 24, 2012)

Rojas claimed the World Boxing Assn. belt on March 28, 1968, beating Colombian Enrique Higgins by decision at the historic Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles.

He surrendered the belt six months later, losing by unanimous decision against Japan's Shozo Saijo at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

"Rojas always drew a good crowd and was a popular main-eventer because people knew if you saw him fight, you'd always get your money's worth," said former fight publicist Don Fraser, whose California Boxing Hall of Fame counts Rojas as an inductee.

With a career record of 38-7-2 with 24 knockouts, Rojas packed them into the Olympic against the likes of Cuba's Sugar Ramos and Mando Ramos in his final fight, a technical knockout loss on Dec. 10, 1970.

He first had a featherweight title shot at World Boxing Council champ Vicente Saldivar in May 1965 at the Coliseum, but was easily being outpointed when the fight was stopped in the 15th round.

Rojas was born Nov. 5, 1941, and grew up in Watts and East Los Angeles. Two of his brothers were sent to San Quentin State Prison. Rojas led a group called "Little Roy's Gang," according to a 1968 Sports Illustrated article, and was sent to the California Youth Authority following a violent clash in which a fellow gang member was shot dead next to him, "a bullet between his eyes," according to the story.

"All I ever was was tough," Rojas said. "I thought I'd put it to work."

As he told The Times in 1968: "If it were not for boxing, I'd probably either be in San Quentin or would already have made the trip to the gas chamber."

After his boxing career ended, Rojas worked as a longshoreman, Fraser said.

Rojas is survived by his daughters Rebecca and Guadalupe and grandchildren.

Archive

British & Irish Boxing Authority (BIBA) Guidelines on Returning to Training
PLEASE NOTE: THIS APPLIES ONLY TO ENGLAND AT THIS TIME, UPDATES WILL BE ISSUED ONCE THE SCOTTISH, WELSH, IRISH AND NORTHERN IRELAND REGIONAL GOVERNMENTS AN...

Dallas boxing icon, former welterweight world champion and hall of fame, died after a week in hospice
Curtis Cokes, the Hall of Fame welterweight who became Dallas’ first world champion in 1966, has died. He was 82....

Nathan Russo Vs Wilmer Gonzalez Added To Scott Harrison Undercard
London, UK - Tuesday 26th May 2020 - It may have been a bank holiday weekend in the United Kingdom, but Promoter Lee McAllister has been mightily busy finding a to...